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Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism Sept. 27, 2012

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Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism. Sept. 27, 2012. review. Where, and when, did the first states emerge in South Asia? What language did the Aryans speak? What was the religion of this early Aryan civilization? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Buddhism and

Buddhismsplus religious

Daoism

Sept. 27, 2012

Page 2: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

review

•Where, and when, did the first states emerge in South Asia?

•What language did the Aryans speak? •What was the religion of this early

Aryan civilization?•What were the primary social classes

of this Vedic civilization?

Page 3: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Basic Buddhist Terms•Buddhists, like Hindus, believe in karma and in

reincarnation

•Nirvana: escape from rebirth, extinction (or paradise, in some varieties of Buddhism)

•Sutras: the written records of the teachings of the Buddha

•The Three Jewels of Buddhism

• The Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha

• The Dharma: Buddhist teachings

• The Sangha: the monastic community.

•Buddhists “take refuge” in those three jewels.

Page 4: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Theravada Buddhism•The Buddhism of Sri Lanka and (now)

much of mainland Southeast Asia•Emphasis on salvation through our own

efforts (accumulating good karma)•Is non-theistic (in theory). Buddha

(Sakyamuni) is seen as a teacher,not a god.

•Emphasis on insight meditation, and on donations to monks and temples

•Claims to be the original Buddhism

Page 5: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

The Mauryan Empire

•The stimulus from Alexander the Great•Founded by Chandragupta by 322 BCE

with a capital in Pataliputra•How is an empire different from a

kingdom?•Greatest ruler was Ashoka (269-231 BCE)•Ashoka promoted Buddhism•What is an empire?

Page 6: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Many Chinas•Disunity in China between 220 and 589•16 kingdoms in the north, many with

rulers of non-Chinese ethnic background•6 dynasties in the south, ruled by people

of Chinese ethnicity•Many Chinese moved south, bringing the

Yangzi into China proper •Many originally non-Chinese peoples,

north and south, became sinified and therefore became Chinese.

Page 7: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Cultural Changes•Tea-drinking spreads from the south to

the north.•Calligraphy, poetry, and painting become

signs of membership in the educated elite.

•New religious movements occur, •religious Daoism (with indigenous roots)•and•Buddhism (imported from South Asia

through Central Asia but transformed into Mahayana Buddhsim.

Page 8: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Mahayana Buddhism

•Buddhism of compassion for others--the Bodhisattva path.

• Bodhisattvas postpone their own admission into nirvana to help others.

•“Northern” Buddhism: China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam

•Has statues of both Buddhas (many different Buddhas) and Bodhisattvas.

•Added new sutras to Theravada sutras.

Page 9: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

VARIETIES OF MAHAYANA PRACTICE

•Sutra Study-salvation through knowledge

•Meditation-salvation by controlling (stilling) the mind and its thoughts.

•Devotion-salvation through faith.

•Nirvana here means rebirth in paradise.

• Ritual--True Word, chanting the Buddha’s name, and esoteric Buddhism

• Lotus Sutra--Nichiren Buddhism (SGI)

Page 10: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Popular Buddhism

•Polytheistic

•More concerned with gaining objects of desire (health, wealth, etc) than stilling desire.

•Little interest in meditation. More interested in prayer, chanting, and bowing

•Finds justification in many sutras.

Page 11: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Religious DaoismEmerged from folk religion. Has shamans, priests, temples, gods, rituals, and revealed sacred texts. (Much of its organizational appearance was borrowed from Buddhism)

Ritual is more important than dogma. (There is no Daoist creed.)

Some Daoists pursue “immortality” through breathing practices (internal alchemy) , physical exercises, sexual exercises, diet, or moral arithmetic.

Page 12: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Common errors in discussing religion

•Confusing what the sacred texts of a religion say, and what the practitioners of that religion do

•confusing what the religious professionals do with what the average lay practitioner does.

• imposing a Western understanding of religion (theistic, doctrine-centered, generating a moral code, etc) on an Asian religion which emphasizes ritual over belief, has no formal theology or creed, or maybe doesn’t even generate its own moral code.

Page 13: Buddhism and Buddhisms plus religious Daoism

Defining religion• Religion: Any attempt to explain the otherwise unexplainable,

predict the otherwise unpredictable, or prevent the otherwise unpreventable by relying on forces that transcend the human realm. Neither belief in a supernatural personality nor the generation of a moral code are necessary for a way of thinking and behaving to be called religious. (Some Buddhists do not believe in a god. Shinto has no moral code of its own.)

• Religion normally involves ritual and/or prayer.

• Religions provide behavioral guidelines as well as guidelines for making value judgments. Examining religion in Asia therefore helps us understand what people in the past considered important and why they did what they did.